dated 1890
Theatrical Like many of Shakespeare's plays,
The Comedy of Errors was adapted and rewritten extensively, particularly from the 18th century on, with varying reception from audiences.
Classical adaptations •
Every Body Mistaken is a 1716 "revival" and directorial adaptation of Shakespeare's play by an anonymous author. •
See If You Like It; ''or, 'Tis All a Mistake'', an anonymous adaptation staged in 1734 at
Covent Garden, performed in two acts with text from Plautus and Shakespeare. Shakespeare purists considered it to be the "worst alteration" available. •
The Twins, an adaptation by
Thomas Hull produced for Covent Garden in 1739, in which Hull played Aegeon. This production was more faithful to Shakespeare's text, and played for several years. It was acted in York, but not printed. Later, nearly 20 years after slavery had been abolished within British domains,
James Boaden wrote, "I incline to think [Kemble's] maturer judgement would certainly have consigned the whole impression to the flames.")
Modern adaptations • The
Flying Karamazov Brothers performed a unique adaptation, produced by
Robert Woodruff, first at the
Goodman Theater in Chicago in 1983, and then again in 1987 at New York's
Vivian Beaumont Theater in
Lincoln Center. This latter presentation was filmed and was aired on
MTV and
PBS. •
The Comedy of Errors adapted and directed by Sean Graney in 2010 updated Shakespeare's text to modern language, with occasional Shakespearean text, for
The Court Theatre. The play appears to be more of a "translation" into modern-esque language, than a reimagination. The play received mixed reviews, mostly criticizing Graney's modern interpolations and abrupt ending. •
15 Villainous Fools, written and performed by Olivia Atwood and Maggie Seymour, a two-woman clown duo, produced by The 601 Theatre Company. The play was performed several times, premiering in 2015 at
Bowdoin College, before touring fringe festivals including Portland, San Diego, Washington, DC, Providence, and New York City. Following this run, the show was picked up by the
People's Improv Theater for an extended run. While the play included pop culture references and original raps, it kept true to Shakespeare's text for the characters of the Dromios. •
A Comedy of Heirors, or The Imposters by feminist
verse playwright
Emily C. A. Snyder performed a staged reading through Turn to Flesh Productions in 2017, featuring
Abby Wilde as Glorielle of Syracuse. The play received acclaim, being named a finalist with the
American Shakespeare Center, as part of the
Shakespeare's New Contemporaries program, as well as "The Top 15 NYC Plays of '17" by
A Work Unfinishing. The play focuses on two sets of female twins, who also interact with Shakespeare's Antipholi. The play is in conversation with several of Shakespeare's comedies, including characters from
The Comedy of Errors,
Twelfth Night,
As You Like It, and
Much Ado About Nothing.
Opera • On 27 December 1786, the opera
Gli equivoci by
Stephen Storace received its première at the
Burgtheater in Vienna. The
libretto, by
Lorenzo da Ponte, Mozart's frequent librettist, worked off a French translation of Shakespeare's play, follows the play's plot fairly closely, though some characters were renamed, Aegeon and Emilia are cut, and Euphemio (previously Antipholus) and Dromio are shipwrecked on Ephesus. •
Frederic Reynolds staged an operatic version in 1819, with music by
Henry Bishop supplemented lyrics from various Shakespeare plays, and sonnets set to melodies by
Mozart,
Thomas Arne, and others. • The Czech composer
Iša Krejčí's 1943 opera
Pozdvižení v Efesu (Turmoil in Ephesus) is based on the play.
Musicals The play has been adapted as a musical several times, frequently by inserting period music into the light comedy. Some musical adaptations include a Victorian musical comedy (Arts Theatre, Cambridge, England, 1951), Brechtian folk opera (
Arts Theatre, London, 1956), and a two-ring circus (
Delacorte Theater, New York, 1967). Fully original musical adaptations include: •
The Boys from Syracuse, composed by
Richard Rodgers and lyrics by
Lorenz Hart. The play premiered on
Broadway in 1938 and
Off-Broadway in 1963, with later productions including a
West End run in 1963 and in a Broadway revival in 2002.
A film adaptation was released in 1940. •
A New Comedy of Errors, or Too Many Twins (1940), adapted from Plautus, Shakespeare and
Molière, staged in modern dress at London's Mercury Theatre. •
The Comedy of Errors - a musical version adapted by Lionel Harris and Robert MacNab with music by
Julian Slade at the
Arts Theatre London in 1956, subsequently broadcast on
ITV with
Patricia Routledge,
Bernard Cribbins and
Frederick Jaeger among the cast. •
The Comedy of Errors (1972) adaptation by James McCloskey, music and lyrics by Bruce Kimmel. Premiered at Los Angeles City College and went on to the American College Theatre Festival. •
The Comedy of Errors is a musical with book and lyrics by
Trevor Nunn, and music by
Guy Woolfenden. It was produced for the
Royal Shakespeare Company in 1976, winning the
Laurence Olivier Award for best musical on its transfer to the
West End in 1977. •
Oh, Brother! is a musical comedy in one act, with music by Michael Valenti and books and lyrics by Donald Driver, which premiered at
ANTA Theatre in 1981, also directed by Driver. The musical takes place during a revolution in an oil rich Middle Eastern country on the Persian Gulf in a quaint resort town where its populace of merchants and revolutionaries mix Eastern tradition with Western consumerism.
The New York Times gave it a poor review, criticising Driver's heavy handedness, while praising some of the music and performances. •
The Bomb-itty of Errors, a one-act
hip-hop musical adaptation, by
Jordan Allen-Dutton, Jason Catalano,
Gregory J. Qaiyum, Jeffrey Qaiyum, and
Erik Weiner, won 1st Prize at
HBO's
Comedy Festival and was nominated opposite
Stephen Sondheim for the Best Lyrics
Drama Desk Award in 2001. • In 1940 the film
The Boys from Syracuse was released, starring Alan Jones and Joe Penner as Antipholus and Dromio. It was a musical, loosely based on
The Comedy of Errors.
Novel In India,
Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar adapted Shakespeare's play in his Bengali novel
Bhranti Bilash (1869). Vidyasagar's efforts were part of the process of championing Shakespeare and the Romantics during the
Bengal Renaissance.
Film The film
Our Relations (1936) starring
Stan Laurel and
Oliver Hardy, was adapted from the
W. W. Jacobs story "The Money Box", but there are no twins in the Jacobs story. Our Relations owes its central conceit to The Comedy of Errors. As in the Shakespeare play, the story revolves around the confusion of two pairs of identical twins: one set of Laurel brothers named "Stan" and "Alf", and one set of Hardy brothers named "Oliver" and "Bert". Stan and Oliver think Alf and Bert were killed at sea. As the story opens, Alf and Bert have just arrived via ship at the same seaport where, unbeknownst to them, their married twin brothers Stan and Oliver live. One nod to the movie's inspiration is a running gag: whenever Stan and Ollie say the same thing at the same time, they immediately perform a childhood ritual that begins: "Shakespeare...Longfellow..." The
Three Stooges film
A Merry Mix Up (1957) starring
Moe Howard,
Larry Fine and
Joe Besser expands the confusion by telling the story of three sets of identical triplets: Bachelors Moe, Larry and Joe; husbands Max, Louie and Jack; and newly-engaged brothers Morris, Luke and Jeff. The triplets can only be distinguished by their choices of neckties, bow ties, or no tie at all. The film
Start the Revolution Without Me (1970) starring
Gene Wilder and
Donald Sutherland involves two pairs of twins, one of each of which is switched at birth; one set is raised in an aristocratic, the other in a peasant family, who meet during the French Revolution. The film
Big Business (1988) is a modern take on
The Comedy of Errors, with female twins instead of male.
Bette Midler and
Lily Tomlin star in the film as two sets of twins separated at birth, much like the characters in Shakespeare's play. The short film
The Complete Walk: The Comedy of Errors was made in 2016 and starred
Phil Davis,
Omid Djalili and
Boothby Graffoe. Indian cinema has made nine films based on the play: •
Bhrantibilas (1963 Bengali film) starring
Uttam Kumar •
Do Dooni Char starring
Kishore Kumar •
Angoor starring
Sanjeev Kumar •
Oorantha Golanta starring
Chandra Mohan •
Ulta Palta in the
Kannada language starring
Ramesh Aravind •
Ulta Palta in the
Telugu language starring
Rajendra Prasad •
Ambuttu Imbuttu Embuttu in the
Tamil language •
Aamait Asal Eemait Kusal in the
Tulu language starring
Naveen D Padil •
Double Di Trouble (2014 Punjabi Film) directed by Smeep Kang and starring
Dharmendra,
Gippy Grewal •
Local Kung Fu 2 (2017
Assamese martial arts film) •
Cirkus (2022 movie in Hindi language starring
Ranveer Singh)
Television •
Roger Daltrey played both Dromios in
the BBC complete works series directed by
James Cellan Jones in 1983. • A two-part TV adaptation was produced in 1978 in the USSR, with a
Russian–
Georgian cast of notable stage actors. • The
Inside No. 9 episode "Zanzibar" (season 4, episode 1) was based on The Comedy of Errors • Season 13 Episode 4 of
Bob's Burgers: 'Comet-y of Errors' is also a reference to Shakespeare's play. == See also ==